Science may have begun as a persuit of truth, however it seems that it was too lofty of a goal. the reason science works is because we can go out into the field and duplicate the results. It has a practical side. Science ultimately is the ultimate form of tinkering. trying this and that untill you have some understanding how something works. Now one can find a watch and assume it was created by something because it is physical and we have prior knowledge that it was created by men.AttentionKMartShoppers wrote:As the rules of science are man-made, why are august's views worse than the views that you are working with? What standard do you compare them to, because, as you ought to know...from august's point of view, the current rules of science (aka naturalism) are bad.I think we'll agree on a lot more. Meanwhile I'm not trying to define ID, but with (great) respect you appear to be trying to redefine the rules of science. To use an analogy, you are like a soccer player coming to play rugby and complaining about the ability to handle the ball.
Lets go back 5000 years in time and bring with us some insulin. It's a liquid created by genetically engineered bacteria. Will it be obvious to ancient men that insulin was created? What if we brought back a compact disc? What about an ipod? Will they know that it was created? On what basis would they make this judgement?